Final arguments were supposed to be Monday morning, but disputes over jury instructions pushed that back and led to an additional hearing Monday.

It became very clear why there was a delay -- a major rift between both sides on the jury instructions.

Camm faces three counts of murder, but the state wanted the jury to have the option with a guilty verdict of deciding Camm pulled the trigger or helped the person already convicted of the murders, Charles Boney.

One week ago, Blankenbaker told WLKY she was hopeful the jury would clear her brother of his family's murders.

Camm's wife, Kim, and kids, Brad and Jill, were shot to death in the garage of their Georgetown home 13 years ago.

"(Judge Jonathon Dartt is) He's going to allow (special prosecutor) Stan Levco to propose to this jury that somehow Dave induced Charles Boney to do this with no connection between Dave and Charles Boney, but somehow Charles Boney was under Dave's influence," Blankenbaker said.

A Floyd County jury convicted Boney of the Camm killings in 2006, but the state believes the two men did it together.

Investigators pointed to the blood evidence as proof -- eight microscopic dots of Jill's blood at the bottom of Camm's shirt.

The state's experts said they're spatter from a gunshot and prove Camm pulled the trigger.

It's what the state has argued since Camm was arrested three days after the murders.

WLKY asked Levco if the jury instruction on aiding contradicts his case.

The other issue is the instruction comes very close to alleging conspiracy, of which Camm was acquitted during his second trial in 2006.

Camm's attorneys alleged the instruction comes very close to double jeopardy.

"If there is another guilty verdict, there will be another reversal and the folks responsible for that will be Stan Levco and Jonathan Dartt by allowing this improper information, not allowing Dave to defense himself," Blankenbaker said.

Neither Camm nor the jury was present for Monday's hearing.

They'll return Tuesday morning with closings set for 9 a.m.

The state will go first, then the defense, then the state will have the last word.